Circus Caper

Circus Caper

North American cover art
Developer(s) Advance Communication Company[1]
Publisher(s) Toho
Composer(s) Michiharu Hasuya, Osamu Kasai, Masaaki Harada
Platform(s) Nintendo Entertainment System
Release date(s)

‹See Tfd›

Genre(s) Platform
Action[1]
Mode(s) Single-player

Circus Caper, known as Moeru! Onīsan (燃える!お兄さん, lit. "Burn! Older brother") in Japan,[2] is the title of a side-scrolling Nintendo Entertainment System video game where the player controls a young boy on a quest to save his sister who has been kidnapped by the circus. The game was released in 1990 by Toho and received poor reviews.

Storyline

The single-player, side-scrolling action game takes the player through various levels, each with a circus theme, fighting various enemies and bosses until he finally defeats the ringmaster and save his sister.

The player start out in the game with little life, and few weapons, but he can collect various icons to increase how many direct hits that he can withstand, keys to open doors, along with various circus items to shoot as projectiles.

Many of the levels can be avoided altogether by just walking backwards and back through the curtain from where the player begins. This will take him right to that level's boss battle.

Bonus levels include such fun things as guiding a bear to jump over flames, avoiding boulders in a car, using Rodan as target practice and meeting Godzilla at the circus grounds.

Differences

The USA version has a number of changes from the Japanese versions. Mainly minigame and RPG elements were removed, the stages were modified and the setting was changed to a Circus. The Japanese version also features several credits screens at the end which were removed from the USA version, probably because the USA staff did not have Japanese knowledge to translate them. The soundtracks also differentiate (for the most part). In the Japanese version instead of weapons, your character shouted quote bubbles and the stages are in different order.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Release information". GameFAQs. Retrieved 2008-07-23.
  2. "English-Japanese title information". JPNES. Retrieved 2010-09-19.


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